Indian scholar ‘self-deports’ from US after visa is revoked for allegedly ‘supporting Hamas’
The homeland security department did not provide details of the activities Ranjani Srinivasan was allegedly involved in.

Indian doctoral student Ranjani Srinivasan, whose visa was revoked for allegedly supporting Palestinian militant group Hamas, has “self-deported” from the United States, the Department of Homeland Security said on Friday.
Kristi Noem, the secretary of Homeland Security, said that the Columbia University student, whose student visa was revoked for “advocating for violence and terrorism”, had voluntarily left the country using the CBP Home App, or the Customs and Border Protection Home mobile application.
The app allows undocumented immigrants or persons whose visa has expired or has been revoked to notify the US government of their intent to leave the country, “offering them the chance to leave before facing harsher consequences”.
Srinivasan, an Indian citizen, had gone to the US on a student visa as a doctoral student in urban planning at New York’s Columbia University.
The Department of Homeland Security alleged that Srinivasan was “involved in activities supporting Hamas”. The Palestinian militant group is designated as a terrorist organisation in the US.
In April 2024, Columbia University became the site of protests against Israel’s war on Gaza that has killed more than 61,700 persons, including over 17,400 children. Soon after, police officers entered the campus and arrested dozens of protesters.
Protest encampments against the war were also erected in several other universities in the US.
The department did not provide details of the activities Srinivasan was allegedly involved in.
It is a privilege to be granted a visa to live & study in the United States of America.
— Secretary Kristi Noem (@Sec_Noem) March 14, 2025
When you advocate for violence and terrorism that privilege should be revoked and you should not be in this country.
I’m glad to see one of the Columbia University terrorist sympathizers… pic.twitter.com/jR2uVVKGCM
Srinivasan’s visa was revoked on March 5 by the Department of State, the homeland security department said in a statement, adding that it had “obtained video footage of her using the CBP Home App to self-deport on March 11”.
Srinivasan was awarded the Fulbright Nehru and Inlaks Scholarships to pursue a master’s degree in critical conservation at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design and was an adjunct assistant professor of urban planning at New York University’s Wagner Graduate School of Public Service.
The visa was revoked amid increased scrutiny of foreign students by the Donald Trump administration following pro-Palestine protests on college campuses in the US.
The homeland security department said on Friday that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement had arrested a Palestinian student, Leqaa Kordia, for overstaying her expired student visa.
On March 8, Mahmoud Khalil, a former Columbia University student of Palestinian origin, was arrested in the US. He had participated in pro-Palestine protests on campus last year. His green card was revoked.
A federal judge, however, stayed Khalil’s deportation.
A green card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, allows an individual to stay and work permanently in the US.
‘More student visas to be revoked’
On Friday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that Washington was likely to revoke visas of more students in the coming days, Reuters reported.
“In the days to come, you should expect more visas will be revoked as we identify people that we should have never allowed in,” Rubio told reporters.
‘No indefinite right to be in US’: JD Vance on green card holders
On Thursday, US Vice President JD Vance contended that a green card holder did not have an “indefinite right” to be in the country.
“This is not fundamentally about free speech,” Vance said in an interview to Fox News. “Yes, it’s about national security, but more importantly, it’s about who we, as an American public, decide gets to join our national community.”
He also reiterated that more deportations of persons with a student visa was to take place. “I think we’ll certainly see some people who get deported on student visas if we determine...It’s not in the best interest of the United States to have them in our country,” he said.